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Macarthur's Jungle War: The 1944 New Guinea Campaign (Modern War Studies)
Macarthur's Jungle War The 1944 New Guinea Campaign - Modern War Studies
Author: Stephen R. Taaffe
When General Douglas MacArthur led Allied troops into the jungles of New Guinea in World War II, he was already looking ahead. By successfully leapfrogging Japanese forces on that island, he placed his armies in a position to fulfill his personal promise to liberate the Philippines. — The New Guinea campaign has gone down in history as one of Mac...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780700608706
ISBN-10: 0700608702
Publication Date: 1/1/1998
Pages: 312
Rating:
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
 1

3.5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Book Type: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 0
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hardtack avatar reviewed Macarthur's Jungle War: The 1944 New Guinea Campaign (Modern War Studies) on + 2569 more book reviews
I found this to be a good overview of the WW II New Guinea campaign. While I knew some of what took place there, this book filled in a lot of holes. And I'm going to have to dig out Dad's service record, as he was a radio operator and gunner on a B-24 in the 5th Air Force and served in the latter stages of this campaign.

A review on the Amazon site disparages this book as an anti-MacArthur rant. However, as a person who has learned through my reading to really dislike MacArthur, I thought the book was a fair appraisal of that general, listing both his good and bad faults, decisions, etc. Especially, when the author states that MacArthur set strategy and mostly left the ground war to his subordinates. And a good part of the book was about those subordinates.

Frankly, while I dislike MacArthur, I feel his insistence on liberating the Philippines, versus attacking Formosa, was our moral duty. Unfortunately, MacArthur once he defeated the Japanese in the Philippines, wasted, as pointed out in the book, the 8th Army 'liberating' the southern Philippine islands, most of which were already under control of the Philippine guerrillas. But that's another story relating to the disturbing part of MacArthur's personality.


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